This article posits the thesis that the development of protectionist
populism in Europe has been significantly influenced by two important economic processes. The cause
of the first process can be found in the collapse of the Bretton Woods system and the resulting move
towards an increased mobility of capital flows. Secondly, globalization of labour is identified as
the other important process behind this phenomenon. The first part of the article provides a
definition of the term protectionist populism. Following this, the relevance of many cultural factors
in the development of protectionist populism is recognized. It is further stated that these factors
are beyond the scope of this article and that its aim is primarily to show that economic factors have
had an undeniable impact in their own right. Consequently, the article goes on to demonstrate how the
fall of the Bretton Woods system in the 1970's produced the liberalization of capital controls.
Furthermore, the article shows how the interaction between mobile capital and globalized labour
produced the "global middle class". The article discusses the negative effects that this had on the
middle class in Europe. In its final part, the link between these economic processes and the rise of
populist movements in Europe is demonstrated. This is done by analysing the literature dealing with
the rhetoric employed by populist parties. The article concludes by affirming the initial thesis
regarding the existence of a link between the collapse of the Bretton Woods system and the
globalization of the labour market with the rise of protectionist populist movements in Europe
without asserting their preeminence over cultural factors.